Why is it so difficult to give the television series the good ending?



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In the last minutes of the Game of thrones Tyrion Lannister (Peter Dinklage) states: "There is nothing more powerful in the world than a good story. Nothing can stop it. No enemy can defeat him. "But if there is one thing we learned in the course of EuThe last season is that, in fact, one thing can conquer a good story: a badly judged end.

Few people expected the eighth season of the series to end. Even less were satisfied – although the jury of public opinion has already condemned The Thrones to death by the fire of the dragon well before his final scenes. Before his last episode, hundreds of thousands of people had signed a petition demanding that the last season be redone with "competent writers". He quickly earned 1.5 million signatures, while discouraging images and tweets flooded the Internet, including a video of Emilia Clarke – whose character, Daenerys, had lost the plot in the penultimate episode – laughing nervously when asked if she liked the last season, as for "Fans on the end of the series.

"There was nothing like it," says Radio Times TV columnist Scott Bryan on the outcry. "I do not think we can wait for this social media reaction to a drama for a long time." Eu, says Bryan, is that the series went beyond the writings of author George RR Martin. "It made us all feel that we had a say in the narrative arc of the story and in which we think the series should go, but also where it deserves to go. Game of thrones is so unique, however, because it is built for the end – who deserves and who will get the throne? "


We will tell you what is true. You can form your own view.

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Emilia Clarke as Daenerys Targaryen on Game of Thrones (AP)

But Game of thrones is not the first feature film to disappoint by its end. After six seasons and 119 episodes, the end of Lost was universally breaded. breaking BadThe final gave rise to mixed reactions. The police drama of David Simon in Baltimore Thread ended with a montage suggesting that the cycle of drugs, murders and corruption would continue – a conclusion that divides, although ultimately realistic. Drama of David Chase in New Jersey The Sopranos was likewise division. After the final, Chase simply said, "Guess what? Life does not end well.

Room of cards, which has continued without Kevin Spacey for his last season, has been directed towards a ridiculous and laughable end, devoid of anything that made the show popular. Online reaction to the last episode of Mad Men In 2015, the gravity of the situation prompted its author, Matthew Weiner, to declare in his first interview: "I do not think there is enough empathy in the world right now."

But why do we have such visceral reactions for television? Why do they matter so much to us? "We all know how to tell a story," says writer Furquan Akhtar, author of the upcoming BBC Three comedy. The thirst. "If you cheat stories in which we have spent years investing, changing one story or another, we will not be happy as an audience. We all successfully tell stories in our daily lives, it's an important part of human interaction. "

Henry Swindell, former screenwriter at the BBC, who worked on The fall, Course of actionand the Channel 4 drama No violation, tells me that a successful TV ending usually starts at the beginning. "Why do we tell a story? We tell stories to make sense of a random, chaotic and random world. "

Swindell says that a central function of the drama is to test our world view, which can be a delicate balance to find to end the TV shows. "Much of our consumption of information challenges our" thesis "of the world. The culture we consume often shows us the antithesis of our worldview, so we need to explore it, engage with it, and finally decide if our vision wins, "he says. "It's also what the stories do, they show us characters confronted with these dilemmas and conflicting ideologies, and we see if they will overcome them and find a solution."

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1/37 Breaking Bad – "Gliding Over All" (2012)

Karma for killing Gale returns for Walter White in season five. The methamphetamine maker believes his cooking days are over. Having lunch with her family, everything seems perfect. And then everything is bad. So, so bad. Hank (Dean Norris) goes to the bathroom and takes a copy of Leaves of Grbad from Walt Whitman – a gift from Gale to Walter White. "To my other favored WW. It's an honor to work with you. Basically, GB. And with that, as Hank realizes Walt's true identity, the end of Heisenberg's empire begins.

AMC

2/37 The sopranos – "Made In America" ​​(2007)

The debate over whether some of the final scenes of television shows are really good will be raging again and again. The Sopranos remain at the center of the conversation. It's a seemingly bbad occasion – a dinner scene at the restaurant. We watch Tony watch the other guests. Carmela arrives, then AJ and Meadow, whom we see for the last time, park their car outside. A bell rings, Tony looks up and the screen goes black. It's an end that has inspired essays with varied interpretations, but in the end, there are still a few well-executed minutes of television – and a cliffhanger that will never have a resolution.

HBO

3/37 EastEnders – The Revelation Kat and Zoe (2001)

"You can not tell me what to do because you are not my muvva" / "YES I AM!" – not the work of Shakespeare, certainly, but one of the greatest moments in the history of the art of soap. The jaws of the nation fell together when they learned that Kat Slater (Jessie Wallace) was not Zoe's sister, but her mother.

BBC

4/37 Game of Thrones – "The rains of Castamere" (2013)

Game of Thrones knew that George RR Martin was ready to kill the main characters, but nothing prepared readers other than those for books for The Red Wedding. Robb Stark (Richard Madden), Talisa Stark (Oona Chaplin) and Catelyn Stark (Michelle Fairley) attend the wedding of Roslin Frey (Alexandra Dowling) and Edmure Tully (Tobias Menzies) when things go terribly bad for the Starks. The Freys turn against them, killing Robb, Talisa and their unborn child. Then, as the blood flows everywhere, Catelyn's throat is sliced. Cut to black. Devastating.

HBO

5/37 Dallas – "A divided house" (1980)

The cliffhanger who launched the end of season trend. Larry Hagman's oil baron, JR Ewing, made a lot of enemies in Dallas. At the end of the third season, one of them did justice, pulling JR on the back twice. However, rather than revealing the culprit, the team behind Dallas left the case unresolved. And in the next eight months – between seasons – the whole world wondered, "Who shot JR?" Not surprisingly, considering the hysteria surrounding the mystery, 350 million people have been listening to watch the telling episode "Who Done It".

CBS

6/37 The Simpsons – "Who Shot Mr. Burns?" (1995)

The showrunner Matt Groening had long wanted to make an episode in which Mr. Burns had been killed, and the culprit was only revealed in the next episode. Dallas' inspiring, animation concluded the first part of the film. The owner of the nuclear power plant was killed by an unknown badailant. Then, after a summer of waiting, the fans finally got the answer. The two-part episode was considered a clbadic and is often considered the best in the series.

FOX

7/37 Doctor Who – "The Separation of the Roads" (2005)

It's almost impossible to choose a unique Doctor Who cliffhanger, especially considering that the 37 seasons (and the ones that count) have frequently used the plot device. Although the introduction of John Hurt's Doctor is certainly among them, one of the best came at the end of the first series restarted. Having absorbed a bunch of swirls, the Doctor struggles and is about to regenerate. Regarding Rose (Billie Piper), the incarnation of this iconic character by Christopher Eccleston sets out the timeless lines: "Before leaving, I just want to tell you that you were fantastic. Absolutely fantastic. And you know what – me too. CGI queue and presentation of the nation's favorite doctor, David Tennant. "So where was I? That's all, Barcelona.

BBC

8/37 Breaking Bad – "Full Measure" (2010)

Gale (David Costabile) is one of the most likeable characters in Breaking Bad. He is not interested in wealth or glory, but in science. However, the subtleties and a good cup of coffee do not prevent him from following the path of Walter White (Bryan Cranston). When the choice between their life has to be made, Walter chooses hers and sends Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) to do the dirty work. Season 3 ends with the Jesse mbadacre by Jesse – an incident that eventually shatters the pillar of the drug Gus Fring.

AMC

9/37 The West Wing – "What kind of day was it" (2000)

The biggest cliffhanger of the West Wing has arrived in Season 1. The episode is making its way from the beginning when we see a Secret Service agent feeling the danger of a nearby window when we are in the dark. a public meeting with the president present. When the episode catches up, gunshots are heard and every member of his senior staff is thrown to the ground. Cut to black while we hear an agent ask the radio: "Who was touched?"

NBC

10/37 Smallville – "Covenant" (2004)

Only until the final of the third season of Smallville was the patience of Superman fans rewarded when viewers saw Clark (Tom Welling) appear naked in the middle of a kryptonian symbol engraved in the field. the farm of his family. "You're going to be reborn," can we hear Jor-El tell Clark Kent, but it was not the only one; the end marks a radical turning point for the series.

The WB

11/37 Twin Peaks – "The last night" (1990)

The last season of Twin Peaks – the last episode of this mysterious drama for 27 years – may have featured the scariest cliffhanger, but the biggest breath of the series came at the end of season one, while Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan), seemingly untouchable, responds knocking on the door of his hotel room, then being shot by an invisible badailant.

ABC

12/37 Buffy against the vampires – "The gift" (2001)

The 100th episode of Buffy ended with one of the most shocking moments of the series (and no, we are not talking about the musical episode). Season 5 is over with the eponymous bad game sacrificing itself to save the world by jumping on a demonic portal. The episode ends with a slow zoom on Buffy's gravestone, which reads: "Sister beloved. Devoted friend. She saved the world. A lot."

The WB

13/37 True Blood – "Pleasure of Love" (2008)

It's easy to forget that True Blood began his career as an acclaimed, Emmy nominated drama, and it's a cliffhanger such as this one that did it: Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin ) sleeps with the neighbor dog Dean, his company. Upon waking, Dean is gone and in his place is the local bartender Sam Merlotte (Sam Trammell). It turns out that he is a shapeshifter.

HBO

14/37 The Walking Dead – "Last day on Earth" (2016)

After eight episodes of editing, the most murderous villain of the comics, Negan, stood up in a scene that fans feared. With the majority of the main actors lined up at his mercy, Negan – in retaliation for the death of one of his gangs – decides which kill using "Eeny Meeny Mino Moe". After selecting his victim, the camera switches POV and Negan clubs the invisible character until death, leaving the fans with a wait of six months before discovering who had met their creator.

AMC

15/37 The remains – "Ten Thirteen" (2015)

The drama of HBO, co-creator of Damon Lindelof, takes place in a world where two percent of the world's population is disappearing into the air during a tragic event called "Sudden Departure." Season two introduced an intriguing mystery: the disappearance of three teenage girls from a Texan town where no one had gone. It was the penultimate episode of the season that clarified this plot when Matt Garvey (Chris Zylka) burst into a caravan under surveillance – but the three teenagers were watching him. In addition, they are all dressed in white, a reminder of the dissolved cult of the first season.

HBO

16/37 Lost – "Deus Ex Machina" (2005)

In episode 11, the writers had introduced a trap buried underground and, week after week, the fans patiently waited for any detail on the mysterious structure that the writers were willing to give them. The end of episode 19 saw John Locke (Terry O'Quinn) desperate knocking on the door, as desperate as the viewers were inside … only for a light to appear from within. This end remains an unforgettable moment for those who watched it at the time of the broadcast.

ABC

17/37 Lost – "Two for the road" (2006)

"I am sorry." "Why?" BANG. On paper, not so effective but on the screen, it was one of the most annoying cliffhangers of Lost. The viewers looked behind their eyes. Michael (Harold Perrineau), eager to save his son from the mysterious Others, shot at Ana-Lucia (Michelle Rodriguez) and, in a cruel gesture, Libby (Cynthia Watros), who stumbled upon the whole thing looking for blankets.

ABC

18/37 Lost – "Through the Mirror – Part 2"

Whether you like or hate Lost, it's undeniable that the season 3 finale was one of the most breathtaking feats in television history, as writers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse revealed a persistent upheaval: flashbacks featuring a suicidal Jack Shephard (Matthew Fox) were, in fact, flashforwards in the future. The survivor of the crash of the Oceanic Flight 815 aircraft managed to leave the island. He had been so desperate to do it for three whole seasons, but he was desperately desperate to return. The end set the benchmark for all future finals and was so huge that she made headlines.

19/37 Line of Duty – First Four Series (2018)

The fourth series of Line of Duty did not withstand shocks. In fact, his first episode featured a cliffhanger that ended up competing with the best of them. While DCI Roz Huntley (Thandie Newton) is dead on the ground, his killer – the judicial coordinator Tim Ifield (Jason Watkins) – decides to send his body, but when his chainsaw comes closer to the face, Roz's eyes open suddenly.

20/37 Heroes – "The Butterfly Effect" (2008)

After the first season, Heroes has become a rather dreadful television. But this cliffhanger is looming in memory for being so left-handed that it deserves to be applauded: after capturing serial killer Sylar, Angela Petrelli – the mother of superheroes Nathan and Peter – tells him that she can provide him with the love and guidance he needs. Angrily, Sylar tells her that she is not his mother, which Angela drops the bomb: "But I'm darling, I am." A revealing mid-season revelation revealing that fans were eager to see the next episode.

NBC

21/37 Gray's Anatomy – "Who's Zoomin 'Who? "(2005)

After spending a whole season watching the thriving romance between medical trainee Meredith Gray (Ellen Pompeo) and Dr. Derek Shephard (Patrick Dempsey), the world of viewers was shaken to discover the shocking revelation that Derek had been married since always.

ABC

22/37 Green Wing – "Emergency" (2004)

The Channel 4 sitcom Green Wing took the term "cliffhanger" literally for each finale of his two series. While the situation became a little fanciful the second time, the first time was a really surprising way to end a humorous series: to have discovered that the colleague with whom he had just slept was his mother, the drugged anesthetist Guy Secretan (Stephen Mangan) steals an ambulance, drives her to the country and loses control. After the crash, the episode ends with Guy and several other characters that were hanging – you guessed it – off a cliff.

Channel 4

23/37 Dexter – "The Getaway" (2009)

A particularly bitter fourth season was coming to an end: after weeks of playing cat and mouse with the Trinity Killer (John Lithgow as Emmy Trophy), Dexter finally put an end to his murderous manners and returned ready for the house. Pack and join his wife Rita on vacation. Only Rita is still at home … dead in the bathtub. Trinity killed him before Dexter reached him. A heartbreaking end to an exceptional season.

Show time

24/37 Battlestar Galactica – "The Last Shine of Kobol: Part Two" (2005)

When things are going extremely well towards the end of the season, you know that something is going on that is important. Battlestar Galactica has not been different. After destroying the Cylon Basestar – an enemy-owned warship – the Boomer crewmember, whose viewers had learned that he was a Cylon in the miniseries aired in the ##################################################################################### 39, previous year, fired in the chest of Commander Adama (Edward James Olmos), the main character of the show.

ABC

25/37 Babylon 5 – "Z'ha & # 39; dum" (1996)

Warned for two seasons that Z'ha'dum means death, fans expected great things from an episode called "Z'ha'dum". They were not mistaken. This ended with the main character of the series who jumped to death. The episode was so big that the episodes that preceded it whistled "Z minus 14 days" and "Z minus 7 days".

PTEN

26/37 24 – "Day 5: 22:00 – 23:00" (2006)

24 was cluttered with huge cliffhangers, but this one – which comes at the end of the 16-episode series – stands out by producing what would be the best series of episodes in the series. President Charles Logan (Gregory Itzin) turns out to be the mastermind behind the shocking badbadinations of David Palmer and Michelle Dessler, who launched the season. This is how the most memorable villain of the series was born.

FOX

27/37 Friends – "The one with the wedding of Ross" (1998)

While Ross (David Schwimmer) and Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) "Are they going, are not they going to do the court much too long, there was a moment in the final of season four that left the fans agape. Right after Rachel's acceptance, Ross was happy with his fiancée Emily (Helen Baxendale), everything goes terribly wrong. Instead of pronouncing Emily's name for the wedding vows, Ross says the iconic phrase "Take Rachel." After the wedding, at the end of the season, everyone was wondering if the two would finally revive their love story.

NBC

28/37 The X-Files – "Anasazi" (1995)

"I'm in a box car, buried in a quarry, and there are corpses everywhere," Mulder told Scully in the season two final. And just as Mulder was solving the enigma of the deaths of these people, the roof of the closed wagon closed, enclosing it inside. Even worse, the Smoking Man arrives with a unit of soldiers. When they open the car, Mulder is in no way visible and they decide to detonate the load. Did Mulder survive? Has he left?

FOX

29/37 Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life – "Fall" (2016)

"It was certainly not the end I was waiting for," said Rory Gilmore actor Alexis Bledel about the finale. "Compliant but frustrating," was how Vanity Fair made reference to the episode. Gilmore Girls' sequel, A Year in the Life, ended with a four-word exchange between Rory and her mother, Lorelai (Lauren Graham). "Mom," said the girl sitting in a bandstand. "Yes," she replies. "I'm pregnant," says Rory. Queue hundreds of fans who want more of the story, which ended up closing the loop.

Netflix

30/37 Star Trek: The New Generation – "The Best of Both Worlds" (1990)

Another sci-fi show brimming with cliffhangers. Star Trek: The new generation has had a lot, but few of them can compete with Picard (Patrick Stewart) who has become a Borg. The third season, the Enterprise crew has no choice but to call on their former captain. Riker (Jonathan Frakes) orders Worf (Michael Dorn) to fire on Borg's Picard ship. The fans had to wait three months to find out if Picard could be saved – and the group almost imploded in the meantime.

primary

31/37 The CO – "Dearest beloved" (2005)

Marissa Cooper (Mischa Barton) and Ryan Atwood (Benjamin McKenzie) would have done everything for each other. When Trey (Logan Marshall-Green), Ryan's brother, gets in the way to attack Marissa, Ryan has no choice but to settle things "once and for all". As the fight ensues, Marissa ends up shooting at Trey. And as the bullet pbades through, Imogen Heap's "Hide and Seek" song – AKA, the song "Mmmmh, what do you say?" – suddenly begins to play. It's hard not to laugh. The pop song runs through the whole scene, in total contradiction with what is happening on the screen. No wonder, then, that Saturday Night Live parodied the scene in one of their most beloved sketches of all time.

Fox

32/37 The US Office – "Casino Night" (2006)

Jim (John Krasinski) and Pam (Jenna Fischer) were the ultimate couple of "will he be, will not he," their chemistry electrifying the early seasons of The Office. Things peaked for the first time during season two finale. After Casino Night at Dunder Mifflin, Jim finally takes Pam aside to reveal his true feelings and tell him, "I'm in love with you." She is then engaged to Roy (David Denman) and decides to answer. to Jim: "What are you doing?" While all hope for the couple seems lost, Jim finds Pam (calling her mother) before the end of the episode and kisses her. Cruelly, the showrunners decided to cut black after the moment, leaving fans wondering for months if the couple would come back on happy screens together (spoiler: they do not do it).

NBC

33/37 Alias ​​- "The Telling" (2003)

JJ Abrams loves finishing things up. Before creating Lost, the filmmaker created Alias, and the finale of season 2 marks one of the biggest goals in the series. In the episode, Sydney (Jennifer Garner) discovers that Francie (Merrin Dungey) is not Francie at all, but a duplicate. The two then argue, and Sydney ends up shooting at Francie then collapses by exhaustion. We jump immediately to Sydney to wake up in Hong Kong. After finding his lover Michael Vaughn (Michael Vartan), Sydney realizes that everything is fine because Michael is wearing a wedding ring. It turns out that she has been missing for almost two years. Cut to black, and the world asks "What just happened?"

ABC

34/37 Spooks – "Smoke and Mirrors" (2003)

The second season of Spooks shocked the nation. Although the episode begins with the CIA undertaking a seemingly simple mission: preventing the badbadination of a Cabinet member, we quickly discover that everything is not going as it seems. Herman Joyce (Tomas Arana), still presumed dead, is still alive and masquerading as Herb Zeigler. Not only that, but the villain elaborated a plan developed to give the impression that Tom (Matthew Macfadyen) badbadinated the Chief of the Defense Staff. With everything that works against Tom, the agent gets stuck in a corner. And when Harry (Peter Firth) loses his faith, Tom decides to shoot Harry with his shotgun. Is Harry dying? Will Tom ever be found innocent? The questions were many.

BBC

35/37 Dragon Ball Z – Next time on Dragon Ball Z

There really is no definitive cliffhanger Dragon Ball Z, since almost every episode of the series ends with one. From Vegeta looking at the camera in a threatening way to the vile Cell, which launches an attack on Goku, the series leaves you everywhere. When this voiceover arrives with "Next Time on Dragon Ball Z", you can be sure that any child who is watching will be hooked and will want to instantly watch the next episode.

Cartoon network

36/37 Pushing Up Daisies – "Kerplunk" (2009)

Pushing Up Daisies ended unceremoniously after only two seasons, the showrunner Bryan Fuller quickly concluding the fantasy series with very little notice. The epilogue was added late in the writing process and allows the narrator to close the story of each character. Yet while Ned (Lee Pace) and Chuck (Anna Friel) stood at her aunt's doorway, waiting to finally reveal that she was alive, fans could see that there was originally had many more seasons to come – and they still want them. desperately.

37/37 Sherlock – "The Fall of Reichenbach" (2012)

After a war of words with Jim Moriarty (Andrew Scott) on the roof of a building (in which Moriarty shoots himself in the head), Sherlock (Benedict Cumberbatch) apparently decides to commit suicide by jumping out of the room. ;building. However, not everything seems to be going well, since Sherlock is seen alive before the end of the episode. Fans of the series – as well as Martin Freeman's Watson – have remained wondering what exactly happened to Sherlock, all of which is revealed in the next special.


1/37 Breaking Bad – "Gliding Over All" (2012)

Karma for killing Gale returns for Walter White in season five. The methamphetamine maker believes his cooking days are over. Having lunch with her family, everything seems perfect. And then everything is bad. So, so bad. Hank (Dean Norris) goes to the bathroom and takes a copy of Leaves of Grbad from Walt Whitman – a gift from Gale to Walter White. "To my other favored WW. It's an honor to work with you. Basically, GB. And with that, as Hank realizes Walt's true identity, the end of Heisenberg's empire begins.

AMC

2/37 The sopranos – "Made In America" ​​(2007)

The debate over whether some of the final scenes of television shows are really good will be raging again and again. The Sopranos remain at the center of the conversation. It's a seemingly bbad occasion – a dinner scene at the restaurant. We watch Tony watch the other guests. Carmela arrives, then AJ and Meadow, whom we see for the last time, park their car outside. A bell rings, Tony looks up and the screen goes black. It's an end that has inspired essays with varied interpretations, but in the end, there are still a few well-executed minutes of television – and a cliffhanger that will never have a resolution.

HBO

3/37 EastEnders – The Revelation Kat and Zoe (2001)

"You can not tell me what to do because you are not my muvva" / "YES I AM!" – not the work of Shakespeare, certainly, but one of the greatest moments in the history of the art of soap. The jaws of the nation fell together when they learned that Kat Slater (Jessie Wallace) was not Zoe's sister, but her mother.

BBC

4/37 Game of Thrones – "The rains of Castamere" (2013)

Game of Thrones knew that George RR Martin was ready to kill the main characters, but nothing prepared readers other than those for books for The Red Wedding. Robb Stark (Richard Madden), Talisa Stark (Oona Chaplin) and Catelyn Stark (Michelle Fairley) attend the wedding of Roslin Frey (Alexandra Dowling) and Edmure Tully (Tobias Menzies) when things go terribly bad for the Starks. The Freys turn against them, killing Robb, Talisa and their unborn child. Then, as the blood flows everywhere, Catelyn's throat is sliced. Cut to black. Devastating.

HBO


5/37 Dallas – "A divided house" (1980)

The cliffhanger who launched the end of season trend. Larry Hagman's oil baron, JR Ewing, made a lot of enemies in Dallas. At the end of the third season, one of them did justice, pulling JR on the back twice. However, rather than revealing the culprit, the team behind Dallas left the case unresolved. And in the next eight months – between seasons – the whole world wondered, "Who shot JR?" Sans surprise, compte tenu de l'hystérie qui entoure le mystère, 350 millions de personnes se sont mises à l'écoute pour regarder l'épisode révélateur "Who Done It".

CBS

6/37 Les Simpson – "Qui a tiré M. Burns?" (1995)

Le showrunner Matt Groening voulait depuis longtemps faire un épisode dans lequel M. Burns avait été tué, et le coupable n’était révélé que lors du prochain épisode. S'inspirant de Dallas, l'animation a conclu la première partie du film. Le propriétaire de la centrale nucléaire a été abattu par un badaillant inconnu. Puis, après un été d'attente, les fans ont finalement eu droit à la réponse. L’épisode en deux parties a été considéré comme un clbadique et est souvent considéré comme le meilleur de la série.

RENARD

7/37 Doctor Who – "La séparation des chemins" (2005)

Il est presque impossible de choisir un cliffhanger unique Doctor Who, surtout si l’on considère que les 37 saisons (et celles qui le comptent) ont fréquemment utilisé le dispositif d’intrigue. Bien que l’introduction de John Hurt’s Doctor figure certainement parmi eux, l’un des meilleurs est survenu à la fin de la première série redémarrée. Ayant absorbé un tas de tourbillons, le Docteur se débat et est sur le point de se régénérer. En ce qui concerne Rose (Billie Piper), l’incarnation de ce personnage emblématique par Christopher Eccleston énonce les lignes intemporelles: «Avant de partir, je veux simplement vous dire que vous étiez fantastique. Absolument fantastique. Et vous savez quoi – moi aussi. »File d’attente CGI et présentation du docteur préféré de la nation, David Tennant. «Alors, où étais-je? C’est tout, Barcelone.

BBC

8/37 Breaking Bad – "Full Measure" (2010)

Gale (David Costabile) est l’un des personnages les plus sympathiques de Breaking Bad. Il ne s'intéresse pas à la richesse ou à la gloire, mais à la science. Cependant, les subtilités et une bonne tbade de café ne l’empêchent pas de suivre la voie de Walter White (Bryan Cranston). Quand le choix entre leur vie doit être fait, Walter choisit la sienne et envoie Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) faire le sale boulot. La saison 3 se termine avec le mbadacre de Gale par Jesse – un incident qui finit par faire tomber le pilier de la drogue Gus Fring.

AMC


9/37 L'aile ouest – «Quel genre de journée a-t-elle été» (2000)

Le plus gros cliffhanger de l’aile ouest est arrivé dans la saison 1. L'épisode fait son chemin depuis le début quand nous voyons un agent des services secrets sentir le danger d'une fenêtre à proximité lors d'une bademblée publique avec le président présent. Lorsque l'épisode se rattrape, des coups de feu retentissent et chaque membre de son personnel supérieur est jeté au sol. Coupure au noir alors que nous entendons un agent demander à la radio: "Qui a été touché?"

NBC

10/37 Smallville – “Covenant” (2004)

Ce n’est que jusqu’à la finale de la troisième saison de Smallville que la patience des fans de Superman a été récompensée lorsque les téléspectateurs ont vu Clark (Tom Welling) apparaître nu au milieu d’un symbole kryptonien gravé dans le champ de la ferme de sa famille. "Vous allez renaître", peut-on entendre Jor-El dire à Clark Kent, mais ce n’était pas le seul; la fin marque un tournant radical pour la série.

Le WB

11/37 Twin Peaks – “Le dernier soir” (1990)

La dernière saison de Twin Peaks – le dernier épisode de ce drame mystérieux depuis 27 ans – a peut-être présenté le cliffhanger le plus effrayant, mais le plus gros souffle de la série est survenu à la fin de la saison un, alors que Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan), apparemment intouchable, répond frapper à la porte de sa chambre d'hôtel, pour être ensuite abattu par un badaillant invisible.

ABC

12/37 Buffy contre les vampires – "Le cadeau" (2001)

Le 100ème épisode de Buffy s’est terminé par l’un des moments les plus choquants de la série (et non, nous ne parlons pas de l’épisode musical). Season five concluded with the eponymous bad-kicker sacrificing herself to save the world by jumping into a demonic portal. The episode ends with a slow zoom onto Buffy’s tombstone, which reads: “Beloved sister. Devoted friend. She saved the world. A lot.“

The WB


13/37 True Blood – "Plaisir d'Amour" (2008)

It's easy to forget that True Blood began life as an acclaimed Emmy-nominated drama, and it was a cliffhanger such as this that made it so: Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin) falls asleep with the friendly neighbour dog Dean for company. Upon waking up, Dean is gone and in his place is local barman Sam Merlotte ( Sam Trammell). Turns out he's a shapeshifter.

HBO

14/37 The Walking Dead – "Last Day on Earth" (2016)

After eight episodes of build-up, the comic book’s deadliest villain, Negan, reared his head in a scene fans were dreading. With the majority of the main cast lined up at his mercy, Negan – in retaliation for the death of one of his gang – decides which one to kill by using “Eeny Meeny Mino Moe”. After selecting his victim, the camera switches POV and Negan bludgeons the unseen character to death leaving fans with a six-month wait before finding out who had met their maker.

AMC

15/37 The Leftovers – "Ten Thirteen" (2015)

Lost co-creator Damon Lindelof's HBO drama was set in a world that saw two per cent of the world’s population disappear into thin air during a tragic event known as the Sudden Departure. Season two presented an intriguing mystery: the disappearance of three teenage girls from a Texan town that nobody had vanished from. It was the season's penultimate episode that cleared up this plot line as Matt Garvey (Chris Zylka) breaks into a heavily-guarded trailer – only to be met with the three teenage girls staring back at him. What’s more is they’re dressed all in white, a callback to the disbanded cult from the first season.

HBO

16/37 Lost – “Deus Ex Machina” (2005)

In episode 11, the writers had introduced a hatch buried underground and, week in week out, the fans waited patiently for any detail about the mysterious structure the writers were willing to give them. The end of episode 19 saw a desperate John Locke (Terry O’Quinn) banging on the door, just as desperate to get inside as the viewers were… only for a light to come on from within. This ending remains an unforgettable moment for those who watched it at the time of broadcast.

ABC


17/37 Lost – “Two for the Road” (2006)

“I’m sorry.” “For what?” BANG. On paper, not so effective but on screen, it equated to one of Lost’s most gasp-inducing cliffhangers. Viewers watched behind their eyes as Michael (Harold Perrineau), desperate to save his son from the mysterious Others, shoots Ana-Lucia (Michelle Rodriguez) and, in a cruel twist, Libby (Cynthia Watros), who has accidentally stumbled upon the whole thing while looking for some blankets.

ABC

18/37 Lost – 'Through the Looking Glbad – Part 2"

Whether you love or hate Lost, there’s no denying that the season three finale deployed one of the most breathtaking rug pulls in television history as writers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse revealed a shake-up long in the running: flashbacks featuring a suicidal Jack Shephard (Matthew Fox) were, in fact, flashforwards to the future. The Oceanic Flight 815 plane crash survivor made it off the island he’d been so desperate to get off for three whole seasons, but was, disturbingly, desperate to get back. The ending set the benchmark for all future finale and was so huge it made newspaper headlines.

19/37 Line of Duty – Series four premiere (2018)

The fourth series of Line of Duty didn’t hold back on the shocks. In fact, its first episode featured a cliffhanger ending to rival the best of them. With DCI Roz Huntley (Thandie Newton) dead on his floor, her murderer – Forensic Coordinator Tim Ifield (Jason Watkins) – sets about dispatching her body, but as his chainsaw nears her face, Roz’s eyes suddenly open.

20/37 Heroes – ”The Butterfly Effect” (2008)

After season one, Heroes became pretty dreadful television. But this cliffhanger looms in the memory for being so left-field it warrants applaud: having captured serial killer Sylar, Angela Petrelli – parent to superheroes Nathan and Peter – tells him she can provide him with the love and guidance he needs. Angry, Sylar tells her she’s not his mother to which Angela drops the bombshell: “But I am dear, I am.” A head-scratching mid-season reveal that had fans chomping at the bit for the next episode.

NBC


21/37 Grey’s Anatomy – “Who’s Zoomin’ Who?” (2005)

After spending an entire season watching the blossoming romance between medical intern Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) and Dr Derek Shephard (Patrick Dempsey), the world of viewers was rocked upon discovering the shock revelation that Derek was married all along.

ABC

22/37 Green Wing – “Emergency“ (2004)

Channel 4 sitcom Green Wing took the term “cliffhanger” quite literally for each finale of its two series. While it became a tad gimmicky the second time around, the first remained a genuinely surprising way for a comedy series to end: having discovered that the colleague he’d just slept with was his mother, drug-addled anaesthetist Guy Secretan (Stephen Mangan) steals an ambulance, drives it to the country and loses control. After crashing, the episode ends with Guy and several other characters dangling – you guessed it – off a cliff.

Channel 4

23/37 Dexter – “The Getaway” (2009)

A particularly nail-biting fourth season was shaping up to end well: after weeks of playing cat-and-mouse with the Trinity Killer (John Lithgow on Emmy-winning form), Dexter finally put an end to his murderous ways and returned home ready to pack up and join his wife Rita on their vacation. Only Rita’s still at home… dead in the bathtub. Trinity killed her before Dexter got to him. A heartbreaking end to a standout season.

Showtime

24/37 Battlestar Galactica – “Kobol's Last Gleaming: Part 2” (2005)

When things are going supremely well towards the end of a season finale, you know something big is about to go down. Battlestar Galactica proved no different. After destroying the Cylon Basestar – a warship belonging to the enemy – crew member Boomer, who viewers had learnt was a Cylon in the mini-series that aired the year before, fires a round into the chest of Commander Adama (Edward James Olmos), the show’s main character.

ABC


25/37 Babylon 5 – “Z’ha'dum” (1996)

Having been warned for two seasons that Z’ha’dum means death, fans expected big things from an episode called “Z’ha’dum”. They weren’t wrong. It ended with the show’s lead character jumping to his death. The episode was so big the episodes leading up to it teased “Z minus 14 days” and “Z minus 7 days.”

PTEN

26/37 24 – “Day 5: 10:00pm – 11:00pm” (2006)

24 was filled to the brim with huge cliffhangers, but this one – arriving at the 16 episode mark – stands out for sparking what would be the show’s best run of episodes. President Charles Logan (Gregory Itzin) is revealed to be the mastermind behind the shocking badbadinations of David Palmer and Michelle Dessler, which kickstarted the season. And thus the show’s most memorable villain was born.

FOX

27/37 Friends – "The One with Ross’s Wedding" (1998)

While Ross (David Schwimmer) and Rachel’s (Jennifer Aniston) “will they, won’t they” courtship arguably went on far too long, there was one moment during the season four finale that left fans with their jaws on the floor. Just after Rachel had accepted Ross was happy with fiancé Emily (Helen Baxendale), everything goes catastrophically wrong. Instead of saying Emily’s name during the wedding vows, Ross says the iconic line: “Take thee Rachel”. After the wedding, as the season finished, everyone was left wondering whether the pair would finally rekindle their romance for good.

NBC

28/37 The X-Files – "Anasazi" (1995)

“I’m in a boxcar, buried inside a quarry, and there are bodies everywhere,” says Mulder to Scully during the season two finale. And just as Mulder solves the riddle of how those people died, the roof of the boxcar slams shut, trapping him inside. Worse still, the Smoking Man then arrives with a unit of soldiers. When they open the boxcar, Mulder’s somehow nowhere to be seen and they decide to blow the freight to smithereens. Did Mulder survive? Did he get away?

FOX


29/37 Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life – "Fall" (2016)

“It certainly wasn't the ending I expected,” Rory Gilmore actor Alexis Bledel said of the finale. “Fitting but frustrating”, was how Vanity Fair referred to the episode. The Gilmore Girls sequel, A Year in the Life, concluded with a four-word exchange between Rory and her mother, Lorelai (Lauren Graham). “Mum”, the daughter says, sitting in a park’s bandstand. “Yeah”, she replies. “I’m pregnant,” Rory says. Queue hundreds of fans wanting more from the story, which had, ultimately, come full circle.

Netflix

30/37 Star Trek: The Next Generation – "Best of Both Worlds" (1990)

Another science fiction show filled to the brim with cliffhangers. Star Trek: The Next Generation had many, but few can measure up to Picard (Patrick Stewart) becoming a Borg. The season three finale sees the Enterprise’s crew having no choice but to turn on their former captain, with Riker (Jonathan Frakes) ordering Worf (Michael Dorn) to open fire on Picard’s Borg ship. Fans had to wait three months to discover whether Picard could be saved – and the fandom almost imploded in the meantime.

primary

31/37 The OC – "The Dearly Beloved" (2005)

Marissa Cooper (Mischa Barton) and Ryan Atwood (Benjamin McKenzie) would have done anything for each other. When Ryan’s brother Trey (Logan Marshall-Green) gets in the way, attacking Marissa, Ryan has no other course of action but to settle things “once and for all” between them. As the brawl ensues, Marissa somehow ends up shooting Trey. And as the bullet goes through him, Imogen Heap’s song “Hide and Seek” – AKA the “Mmmmh, what you say?” song – suddenly starts playing. It’s hard not to laugh. The pop song cuts through the scene, completely at odds with what’s happening on screen. No wonder, then, that Saturday Night Live famously parodied the scene in one of their most-beloved skits of all time.

Fox

32/37 The Office US – "Casino Night" (2006)

Jim (John Krasinski) and Pam (Jenna Fischer) were the ultimate “will they, won’t they” couple, their chemistry electrifying the early seasons of The Office. Things peaked for the first time during the season two finale. Following Casino Night at Dunder Mifflin, Jim finally takes Pam aside to reveal his true feelings, telling her: “I’m in love with you.” She is, at the time, engaged to Roy (David Denman), and decides to reply to Jim: “What are you doing?” While all hope for the pair seems lost, Jim finds Pam (calling her mother) before the episode’s end and kisses her. Cruelly, the showrunners decided to cut to black after the moment, leaving fans wondering for months whether the couple would return to screens happily together (spoiler: they do not).

NBC


33/37 Alias – "The Telling" (2003)

JJ Abrams loves ending things on a twist. Before creating the mystery-box filled Lost, the filmmaker created Alias, and the season two finale marks one the show’s greatest endings. The episode sees Sydney (Jennifer Garner) discover that Francie (Merrin Dungey) is not Francie at all, but a duplicate. The two then brawl, ending with Sydney shooting Francie and then collapsing due to exhaustion. We immediately jump to Sydney waking up in Hong Kong. After reuniting with her lover Michael Vaughn (Michael Vartan), Sydney realises things are amiss as Michael is wearing a wedding ring. Turns out, she has been missing for almost two years. Cut to black, and the world asking “What just happened?”

ABC

34/37 Spooks – "Smoke and Mirrors" (2003)

The season two finale of Spooks shocked the nation. While the episode begins with the CIA taking on a seemingly straightforward mission – to prevent a member of the Cabinet being badbadinated – we soon discover that everything’s not as it seems. The formerly-presumed dead Herman Joyce (Tomas Arana) is still alive and masquerading as Herb Zeigler. Not only that, but the villain has masterminded an elaborate plan to make it seem as if Tom (Matthew Macfadyen) has badbadinated the Chief of the Defence Staff. With everything working against Tom, the agent finds himself backed into a corner. And when Harry (Peter Firth) loses faith, Tom decides to shoot Harry with his shotgun. Does Harry die? Will Tom ever be found innocent? The questions were many.

BBC

35/37 Dragon Ball Z – Next time on Dragon Ball Z

There’s really no definitive Dragon Ball Z cliffhanger, as almost every single episode in the series finishes with one. From Vegeta staring menacingly at the camera to the villainous Cell launching a deadline attack on Goku, the series leaves you anywhere and everywhere. When that voice-over comes in with “Next time on Dragon Ball Z”, you can guarantee any child watching will be hooked and instantly wanting to watch the next episode.

Cartoon Network

36/37 Pushing Up Daisies – “Kerplunk” (2009)

Pushing Up Daisies was unceremoniously brought to an end after just two seasons, with showrunner Bryan Fuller having to quickly conclude the whimsical series with very little notice. The epilogue was added late into the writing process and sees the narrator offer some closure to each characters’ story. Yet, with Ned (Lee Pace) and Chuck (Anna Friel) standing on her aunts’ doorstep, waiting to finally reveal that she’s alive, fans could see that there were originally supposed to be many more seasons to come – and they still want them desperately.


37/37 Sherlock – "The Reichenbach Fall" (2012)

Following a war of words with Jim Moriarty (Andrew Scott) on the roof of a building (in which Moriarty shoots himself in the head), Sherlock (Benedict Cumberbatch) decides to seemingly commit suicide by jumping off the building. However, not all is at it seems, as Sherlock is seen alive before the episode end. Fans of the series – plus Martin Freeman’s Watson – were left questioning what exactly happened to Sherlock, with all being revealed in the following special.

There are three types of on-screen ending, he adds. The closed ending, where either everybody lives happily ever after, or everybody’s dead. “This world is closed, we’ve dealt with it and there’s no need to come back here,” he says. These endings often feature what Hitchbad calls the “morality” or “redistribution” clause” – where the good are rewarded and the bad are punished – which gives the audience catharsis. Next, there’s the open ending, which could be a cliff-hanger, and finally, the ironic ending. “An ironic ending is where the good aren’t obviously rewarded and the bad aren’t obviously punished,” he says. “This often happens in political thrillers where a character gets the power they wanted but have had to sell their soul to do it. So their ‘punishment’ is that they are haunted by their choices and will never actually find happiness.”

Not all shows fall at the final hurdle. Fleabag, the BBC Three series written by and starring Phoebe Waller-Bridge, came to an end earlier this year after two series, and was met with almost unanimous praise.

Sian Clifford, who plays Fleabag’s sister Claire, tells me that Waller-Bridge had originally intended to keep the show to just one series. “We were asked to do another series early on and Phoebe wasn’t sure,” she explains. “Her source material had been the one-woman play and she felt the story was complete then. But fortunately, she was able to have the time that she needed and during the time she had ideas.”

Although she initially thought the show could go on for longer, Clifford thinks it ended at the right time. “I often encounter people who say: ‘Do more! Do more!’ But I really defend the decision now. I think the story is complete.”

Phoebe Waller-Bridge in ‘Fleabag’ (BBC/Two Brothers/Luke Varley)

Not that Fleabag’s story was neatly tied up. In fact, the ending was beautiful in part because it denied viewers the blissful romantic ending they craved. “It wasn’t about tying things up. I don’t think that was in Phoebe’s mind,” Clifford explains. “Because life is messy. You never reach a point where everything is fixed and healed and dealt with, it doesn’t work like that. But there is hope, and hope galvanises people.”

Fleabag has taught Clifford that collaboration is the key to success, but she says that the hierarchical nature of the entertainment business can have a negative impact on how other stories are told and ultimately concluded. “I wish projects felt more collaborative and not so hierarchical. That’s why there have been so many abuses of power. When you have very powerful producers it can be difficult for people to be creatively free,” she says. “It’s notorious that projects are completely hamstrung by producers, who won’t let writers tell their stories or directors create their vision … If you’re in a situation where you feel restricted, it definitely impacts storytelling and means that projects don’t fulfil their potential towards the end.”

Bryan thinks that, in general, it’s easier to bring shorter shows like Fleabag to a conclusion. “Shorter shows always seem to do well, primarily because it has a narrative arc that is usually planned from the start,” he says. “British shows are very good at this, because even shows on commercial networks here are never planned for more than a couple of series at the start and actor availability can be quite limited to commit for a longer run.” The longer a show runs, the higher the chances it will be cancelled before the story reaches its conclusion. “It’s hard. How many shows have we continued all the way through until the end? So many just drop off.”

TV critic and Independent arts columnist Fiona Sturges thinks that TV conclusions are becoming increasingly complex. “I think endings are more challenging than they used to be,” she says. “You have to have scores of subplots, just to keep that level of engagement. And so when you try to wrap up the subplots at once, it’s pretty much impossible. There’s so much choice that you don’t give shows the attention you used to, because you think, ‘f**k it, there’s something else on that I can start and it’ll give me that sort of instant satisfaction.’ That’s why soap operas are so skilled, because they manage to keep people endlessly engaged.”

‘Fleabag’ came to an end with its second series earlier this year (BBC)

Sturges also warns of “multiple ending syndrome”, where TV shows limp on and spend too much time on their conclusions. “I think there are a lot of writers who do think everything has to be neatly wrapped up,” she says. “That doesn’t necessarily have to be the case. You can leave a bit of mystery”.

Swindell agrees. “One of the mistakes that is made with endings is people often spend too much screen-time on them,” he says. “If you think about the best endings, the drama, crisis and climax go on as long as possible, but the resolution is as quick as possible. Because that’s what’s exciting for us to see.”

Bafta-winning screenwriter Jimmy McGovern once said, “A great ending should be both surprising and inevitable.” The ending of Game of thrones was certainly surprising, and it seemed inevitable it wouldn’t please everyone. Now we’re consuming stories at a faster pace than ever before, shows like this, that make us wait every week, face increased pressure.

But the upset proves that TV endings are not just about wrapping up a story – they’re about leaving a legacy. Viewers have an emotional connection with the few stories and characters we follow until the end, and the conclusion of these narratives greatly affects our experience. Just like our real-life relationships, it seems we often remember TV shows by how they end, rather than the joy they once gave us along the way.

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